Commit Graph

1086 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Waygood 857fd4f683
[ty] Add test case for fixed panic (#21832) 2025-12-07 15:58:11 +00:00
Charlie Marsh 285d6410d3
[ty] Avoid double-analyzing tuple in `Final` subscript (#21828)
## Summary

As-is, a single-element tuple gets destructured via:

```rust
let arguments = if let ast::Expr::Tuple(tuple) = slice {
    &*tuple.elts
} else {
    std::slice::from_ref(slice)
};
```

But then, because it's a single element, we call
`infer_annotation_expression_impl`, passing in the tuple, rather than
the first element.

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1793.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1768.

---------

Co-authored-by: Claude Opus 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-12-07 14:27:14 +00:00
Charlie Marsh ef45c97dab
[ty] Allow `tuple[Any, ...]` to assign to `tuple[int, *tuple[int, ...]]` (#21803)
## Summary

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1750.
2025-12-05 19:04:23 +00:00
Micha Reiser 9714c589e1
[ty] Support renaming import aliases (#21792) 2025-12-05 19:12:13 +01:00
Shunsuke Shibayama 2f05ffa2c8
[ty] more detailed description of "Size limit on unions of literals" in mdtest (#21804) 2025-12-05 17:34:39 +00:00
Dhruv Manilawala b623189560
[ty] Complete support for `ParamSpec` (#21445)
## Summary

Closes: https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/157

This PR adds support for the following capabilities involving a
`ParamSpec` type variable:
- Representing `P.args` and `P.kwargs` in the type system
- Matching against a callable containing `P` to create a type mapping
- Specializing `P` against the stored parameters

The value of a `ParamSpec` type variable is being represented using
`CallableType` with a `CallableTypeKind::ParamSpecValue` variant. This
`CallableTypeKind` is expanded from the existing `is_function_like`
boolean flag. An `enum` is used as these variants are mutually
exclusive.

For context, an initial iteration made an attempt to expand the
`Specialization` to use `TypeOrParameters` enum that represents that a
type variable can specialize into either a `Type` or `Parameters` but
that increased the complexity of the code as all downstream usages would
need to handle both the variants appropriately. Additionally, we'd have
also need to establish an invariant that a regular type variable always
maps to a `Type` while a paramspec type variable always maps to a
`Parameters`.

I've intentionally left out checking and raising diagnostics when the
`ParamSpec` type variable and it's components are not being used
correctly to avoid scope increase and it can easily be done as a
follow-up. This would also include the scoping rules which I don't think
a regular type variable implements either.

## Test Plan

Add new mdtest cases and update existing test cases.

Ran this branch on pyx, no new diagnostics.

### Ecosystem analysis

There's a case where in an annotated assignment like:
```py
type CustomType[P] = Callable[...]

def value[**P](...): ...

def another[**P](...):
	target: CustomType[P] = value
```
The type of `value` is a callable and it has a paramspec that's bound to
`value`, `CustomType` is a type alias that's a callable and `P` that's
used in it's specialization is bound to `another`. Now, ty infers the
type of `target` same as `value` and does not use the declared type
`CustomType[P]`. [This is the
assignment](0980b9d9ab/src/async_utils/gen_transform.py (L108))
that I'm referring to which then leads to error in downstream usage.
Pyright and mypy does seem to use the declared type.

There are multiple diagnostics in `dd-trace-py` that requires support
for `cls`.

I'm seeing `Divergent` type for an example like which ~~I'm not sure
why, I'll look into it tomorrow~~ is because of a cycle as mentioned in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1729#issuecomment-3612279974:
```py
from typing import Callable

def decorator[**P](c: Callable[P, int]) -> Callable[P, str]: ...

@decorator
def func(a: int) -> int: ...

# ((a: int) -> str) | ((a: Divergent) -> str)
reveal_type(func)
```

I ~~need to look into why are the parameters not being specialized
through multiple decorators in the following code~~ think this is also
because of the cycle mentioned in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1729#issuecomment-3612279974 and
the fact that we don't support `staticmethod` properly:
```py
from contextlib import contextmanager

class Foo:
    @staticmethod
    @contextmanager
    def method(x: int):
        yield

foo = Foo()
# ty: Revealed type: `() -> _GeneratorContextManager[Unknown, None, None]` [revealed-type]
reveal_type(foo.method)
```

There's some issue related to `Protocol` that are generic over a
`ParamSpec` in `starlette` which might be related to
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1635 but I'm not sure. Here's a
minimal example to reproduce:

<details><summary>Code snippet:</summary>
<p>

```py
from collections.abc import Awaitable, Callable, MutableMapping
from typing import Any, Callable, ParamSpec, Protocol

P = ParamSpec("P")

Scope = MutableMapping[str, Any]
Message = MutableMapping[str, Any]
Receive = Callable[[], Awaitable[Message]]
Send = Callable[[Message], Awaitable[None]]

ASGIApp = Callable[[Scope, Receive, Send], Awaitable[None]]

_Scope = Any
_Receive = Callable[[], Awaitable[Any]]
_Send = Callable[[Any], Awaitable[None]]

# Since `starlette.types.ASGIApp` type differs from `ASGIApplication` from `asgiref`
# we need to define a more permissive version of ASGIApp that doesn't cause type errors.
_ASGIApp = Callable[[_Scope, _Receive, _Send], Awaitable[None]]


class _MiddlewareFactory(Protocol[P]):
    def __call__(
        self, app: _ASGIApp, *args: P.args, **kwargs: P.kwargs
    ) -> _ASGIApp: ...


class Middleware:
    def __init__(
        self, factory: _MiddlewareFactory[P], *args: P.args, **kwargs: P.kwargs
    ) -> None:
        self.factory = factory
        self.args = args
        self.kwargs = kwargs


class ServerErrorMiddleware:
    def __init__(
        self,
        app: ASGIApp,
        value: int | None = None,
        flag: bool = False,
    ) -> None:
        self.app = app
        self.value = value
        self.flag = flag

    async def __call__(self, scope: Scope, receive: Receive, send: Send) -> None: ...


# ty: Argument to bound method `__init__` is incorrect: Expected `_MiddlewareFactory[(...)]`, found `<class 'ServerErrorMiddleware'>` [invalid-argument-type]
Middleware(ServerErrorMiddleware, value=500, flag=True)
```

</p>
</details> 

### Conformance analysis

> ```diff
> -constructors_callable.py:36:13: info[revealed-type] Revealed type:
`(...) -> Unknown`
> +constructors_callable.py:36:13: info[revealed-type] Revealed type:
`(x: int) -> Unknown`
> ```

Requires return type inference i.e.,
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21551

> ```diff
> +constructors_callable.py:194:16: error[invalid-argument-type]
Argument is incorrect: Expected `list[T@__init__]`, found `list[Unknown
| str]`
> +constructors_callable.py:194:22: error[invalid-argument-type]
Argument is incorrect: Expected `list[T@__init__]`, found `list[Unknown
| str]`
> +constructors_callable.py:195:4: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument
is incorrect: Expected `list[T@__init__]`, found `list[Unknown | int]`
> +constructors_callable.py:195:9: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument
is incorrect: Expected `list[T@__init__]`, found `list[Unknown | str]`
> ```

I might need to look into why this is happening...

> ```diff
> +generics_defaults.py:79:1: error[type-assertion-failure] Type
`type[Class_ParamSpec[(str, int, /)]]` does not match asserted type
`<class 'Class_ParamSpec'>`
> ```

which is on the following code
```py
DefaultP = ParamSpec("DefaultP", default=[str, int])

class Class_ParamSpec(Generic[DefaultP]): ...

assert_type(Class_ParamSpec, type[Class_ParamSpec[str, int]])
```

It's occurring because there's no equivalence relationship defined
between `ClassLiteral` and `KnownInstanceType::TypeGenericAlias` which
is what these types are.

Everything else looks good to me!
2025-12-05 22:00:06 +05:30
Douglas Creager e42cdf8495
[ty] Carry generic context through when converting class into `Callable` (#21798)
When converting a class (whether specialized or not) into a `Callable`
type, we should carry through any generic context that the constructor
has. This includes both the generic context of the class itself (if it's
generic) and of the constructor methods (if they are separately
generic).

To help test this, this also updates the `generic_context` extension
function to work on `Callable` types and unions; and adds a new
`into_callable` extension function that works just like
`CallableTypeOf`, but on value forms instead of type forms.

Pulled this out of #21551 for separate review.
2025-12-05 08:57:21 -05:00
Alex Waygood 48f7f42784
[ty] Minor improvements to `assert_type` diagnostics (#21811) 2025-12-05 12:33:30 +00:00
Shunsuke Shibayama 1951f1bbb8
[ty] fix panic when instantiating a type variable with invalid constraints (#21663) 2025-12-04 18:48:38 -08:00
Shunsuke Shibayama 10de342991
[ty] fix build failure caused by conflicts between #21683 and #21800 (#21802) 2025-12-04 18:20:24 -08:00
Shunsuke Shibayama 3511b7a06b
[ty] do nothing with `store_expression_type` if `inner_expression_inference_state` is `Get` (#21718)
## Summary

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1688

## Test Plan

N/A
2025-12-04 18:05:41 -08:00
Shunsuke Shibayama f3e5713d90
[ty] increase the limit on the number of elements in a non-recursively defined literal union (#21683)
## Summary

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/957

As explained in https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/957, literal
union types for recursively defined values ​​can be widened early to
speed up the convergence of fixed-point iterations.
This PR achieves this by embedding a marker in `UnionType` that
distinguishes whether a value is recursively defined.

This also allows us to identify values ​​that are not recursively
defined, so I've increased the limit on the number of elements in a
literal union type for such values.

Edit: while this PR doesn't provide the significant performance
improvement initially hoped for, it does have the benefit of allowing
the number of elements in a literal union to be raised above the salsa
limit, and indeed mypy_primer results revealed that a literal union of
220 elements was actually being used.

## Test Plan

`call/union.md` has been updated
2025-12-04 18:01:48 -08:00
Carl Meyer a9de6b5c3e
[ty] normalize typevar bounds/constraints in cycles (#21800)
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1587

## Summary

Perform cycle normalization on typevar bounds and constraints (similar
to how it was already done for typevar defaults) in order to ensure
convergence in cyclic cases.

There might be another fix here that could avoid the cycle in many more
cases, where we don't eagerly evaluate typevar bounds/constraints on
explicit specialization, but just accept the given specialization and
later evaluate to see whether we need to emit a diagnostic on it. But
the current fix here is sufficient to solve the problem and matches the
patterns we use to ensure cycle convergence elsewhere, so it seems good
for now; left a TODO for the other idea.

This fix is sufficient to make us not panic, but not sufficient to get
the semantics fully correct; see the TODOs in the tests. I have ideas
for fixing that as well, but it seems worth at least getting this in to
fix the panic.

## Test Plan

Test that previously panicked now does not.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alex Waygood <Alex.Waygood@Gmail.com>
2025-12-04 15:17:57 -08:00
Andrew Gallant 32f400a457 [ty] Make auto-import ignore symbols in modules starting with a `_`
This applies recursively. So if *any* component of a module name starts
with a `_`, then symbols from that module are excluded from auto-import.

The exception is when it's a module within first party code. Then we
want to include it in auto-import.
2025-12-04 13:21:26 -05:00
Aria Desires 6491932757
[ty] Fix crash when hovering an unknown string annotation (#21782)
## Summary

I have no idea what I'm doing with the fix (all the interesting stuff is
in the second commit).

The basic problem is the compiler emits the diagnostic:

```
x: "foobar"
    ^^^^^^
```

Which the suppression code-action hands the end of to `Tokens::after`
which then panics because that function panics if handed an offset that
is in the middle of a token.

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1748

## Test Plan

Many tests added (only the e2e test matters).
2025-12-04 09:11:40 +01:00
Micha Reiser a9f2bb41bd
[ty] Don't send publish diagnostics for clients supporting pull diagnostics (#21772) 2025-12-04 08:12:04 +01:00
Aria Desires e2b72fbf99
[ty] cleanup test path (#21781)
Fixes
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21745#discussion_r2586552295
2025-12-03 21:54:50 +00:00
Alex Waygood 14fce0d440
[ty] Improve the display of various special-form types (#21775) 2025-12-03 21:19:59 +00:00
Alex Waygood 8ebecb2a88
[ty] Add subdiagnostic hint if the user wrote `X = Any` rather than `X: Any` (#21777) 2025-12-03 20:42:21 +00:00
Aria Desires 45ac30a4d7
[ty] Teach `ty` the meaning of desperation (try ancestor `pyproject.toml`s as search-paths if module resolution fails) (#21745)
## Summary

This makes an importing file a required argument to module resolution,
and if the fast-path cached query fails to resolve the module, take the
slow-path uncached (could be cached if we want)
`desperately_resolve_module` which will walk up from the importing file
until it finds a `pyproject.toml` (arbitrary decision, we could try
every ancestor directory), at which point it takes one last desperate
attempt to use that directory as a search-path. We do not continue
walking up once we've found a `pyproject.toml` (arbitrary decision, we
could keep going up).

Running locally, this fixes every broken-for-workspace-reasons import in
pyx's workspace!

* Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1539
* Improves https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/839

## Test Plan

The workspace tests see a huge improvement on most absolute imports.
2025-12-03 15:04:36 -05:00
Alex Waygood 0280949000
[ty] fix panic when attempting to infer the variance of a PEP-695 class that depends on a recursive type aliases and also somehow protocols (#21778)
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1716.

## Test plan

I added a corpus snippet that causes us to panic on `main` (I tested by
running `cargo run -p ty_python_semantic --test=corpus` without the fix
applied).
2025-12-03 19:01:42 +00:00
David Peter 1f4f8d9950
[ty] Fix flow of associated member states during star imports (#21776)
## Summary

Star-imports can not just affect the state of symbols that they pull in,
they can also affect the state of members that are associated with those
symbols. For example, if `obj.attr` was previously narrowed from `int |
None` to `int`, and a star-import now overwrites `obj`, then the
narrowing on `obj.attr` should be "reset".

This PR keeps track of the state of associated members during star
imports and properly models the flow of their corresponding state
through the control flow structure that we artificially create for
star-imports.

See [this
comment](https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1355#issuecomment-3607125005)
for an explanation why this caused ty to see certain `asyncio` symbols
as not being accessible on Python 3.14.

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1355

## Ecosystem impact

```diff
async-utils (https://github.com/mikeshardmind/async-utils)
- src/async_utils/bg_loop.py:115:31: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to bound method `set_task_factory` is incorrect: Expected `_TaskFactory | None`, found `def eager_task_factory[_T_co](loop: AbstractEventLoop | None, coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, _T_co@eager_task_factory], *, name: str | None = None, context: Context | None = None) -> Task[_T_co@eager_task_factory]`
- Found 30 diagnostics
+ Found 29 diagnostics

mitmproxy (https://github.com/mitmproxy/mitmproxy)
+ mitmproxy/utils/asyncio_utils.py:96:60: warning[unused-ignore-comment] Unused blanket `type: ignore` directive
- test/conftest.py:37:31: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to bound method `set_task_factory` is incorrect: Expected `_TaskFactory | None`, found `def eager_task_factory[_T_co](loop: AbstractEventLoop | None, coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, _T_co@eager_task_factory], *, name: str | None = None, context: Context | None = None) -> Task[_T_co@eager_task_factory]`
```

All of these seem to be correct, they give us a different type for
`asyncio` symbols that are now imported from different
`sys.version_info` branches (where we previously failed to recognize
some of these as statically true/false).

```diff
dd-trace-py (https://github.com/DataDog/dd-trace-py)
- ddtrace/contrib/internal/asyncio/patch.py:39:12: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to function `unwrap` is incorrect: Expected `WrappedFunction`, found `def create_task[_T](self, coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, _T@create_task] | Generator[Any, None, _T@create_task], *, name: object = None) -> Task[_T@create_task]`
+ ddtrace/contrib/internal/asyncio/patch.py:39:12: error[invalid-argument-type] Argument to function `unwrap` is incorrect: Expected `WrappedFunction`, found `def create_task[_T](self, coro: Generator[Any, None, _T@create_task] | Coroutine[Any, Any, _T@create_task], *, name: object = None) -> Task[_T@create_task]`
```

Similar, but only results in a diagnostic change.

## Test Plan

Added a regression test
2025-12-03 17:52:31 +01:00
github-actions[bot] b08f0b2caa
[ty] Sync vendored typeshed stubs (#21715)
Co-authored-by: typeshedbot <>
Co-authored-by: David Peter <mail@david-peter.de>
2025-12-03 15:49:51 +00:00
David Peter d6e472f297
[ty] Reachability constraints: minor documentation fixes (#21774) 2025-12-03 16:40:11 +01:00
Douglas Creager 45842cc034
[ty] Fix non-determinism in `ConstraintSet.specialize_constrained` (#21744)
This fixes a non-determinism that we were seeing in the constraint set
tests in https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21715.

In this test, we create the following constraint set, and then try to
create a specialization from it:

```
(T@constrained_by_gradual_list = list[Base])
  ∨
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
```

That is, `T` is either specifically `list[Base]`, or it's any `list`.
Our current heuristics say that, absent other restrictions, we should
specialize `T` to the more specific type (`list[Base]`).

In the correct test output, we end up creating a BDD that looks like
this:

```
(T@constrained_by_gradual_list = list[Base])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ (Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
    ┡━₁ always
    └─₀ never
```

In the incorrect output, the BDD looks like this:

```
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ never
```

The difference is the ordering of the two individual constraints. Both
constraints appear in the first BDD, but the second BDD only contains `T
is any list`. If we were to force the second BDD to contain both
constraints, it would look like this:

```
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ (T@constrained_by_gradual_list = list[Base])
    ┡━₁ always
    └─₀ never
```

This is the standard shape for an OR of two constraints. However! Those
two constraints are not independent of each other! If `T` is
specifically `list[Base]`, then it's definitely also "any `list`". From
that, we can infer the contrapositive: that if `T` is not any list, then
it cannot be `list[Base]` specifically. When we encounter impossible
situations like that, we prune that path in the BDD, and treat it as
`false`. That rewrites the second BDD to the following:

```
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ (T@constrained_by_gradual_list = list[Base])
    ┡━₁ never   <-- IMPOSSIBLE, rewritten to never
    └─₀ never
```

We then would see that that BDD node is redundant, since both of its
outgoing edges point at the `never` node. Our BDDs are _reduced_, which
means we have to remove that redundant node, resulting in the BDD we saw
above:

```
(Bottom[list[Any]] ≤ T@constrained_by_gradual_list ≤ Top[list[Any]])
┡━₁ always
└─₀ never       <-- redundant node removed
```

The end result is that we were "forgetting" about the `T = list[Base]`
constraint, but only for some BDD variable orderings.

To fix this, I'm leaning in to the fact that our BDDs really do need to
"remember" all of the constraints that they were created with. Some
combinations might not be possible, but we now have the sequent map,
which is quite good at detecting and pruning those.

So now our BDDs are _quasi-reduced_, which just means that redundant
nodes are allowed. (At first I was worried that allowing redundant nodes
would be an unsound "fix the glitch". But it turns out they're real!
[This](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/130209) is the
paper that introduces them, though it's very difficult to read. Knuth
mentions them in §7.1.4 of
[TAOCP](https://course.khoury.northeastern.edu/csu690/ssl/bdd-knuth.pdf),
and [this paper](https://par.nsf.gov/servlets/purl/10128966) has a nice
short summary of them in §2.)

While we're here, I've added a bunch of `debug` and `trace` level log
messages to the constraint set implementation. I was getting tired of
having to add these by hands over and over. To enable them, just set
`TY_LOG` in your environment, e.g.

```sh
env TY_LOG=ty_python_semantic::types::constraints::SequentMap=trace ty check ...
```

[Note, this has an `internal` label because are still not using
`specialize_constrained` in anything user-facing yet.]
2025-12-03 10:19:39 -05:00
Alex Waygood cd079bd92e
[ty] Improve `@override`, `@final` and Liskov checks in cases where there are multiple reachable definitions (#21767) 2025-12-03 12:51:36 +00:00
Alex Waygood 5756b3809c
[ty] Extend `invalid-explicit-override` to also cover properties decorated with `@override` that do not override anything (#21756) 2025-12-03 11:27:47 +00:00
Micha Reiser 92c5f62ec0
[ty] Enable LRU collection for parsed module (#21749) 2025-12-03 12:16:18 +01:00
David Peter 21e5a57296
[ty] Support typevar-specialized dynamic types in generic type aliases (#21730)
## Summary

For a type alias like the one below, where `UnknownClass` is something
with a dynamic type, we previously lost track of the fact that this
dynamic type was explicitly specialized *with a type variable*. If that
alias is then later explicitly specialized itself (`MyAlias[int]`), we
would miscount the number of legacy type variables and emit a
`invalid-type-arguments` diagnostic
([playground](https://play.ty.dev/886ae6cc-86c3-4304-a365-510d29211f85)).
```py
T = TypeVar("T")

MyAlias: TypeAlias = UnknownClass[T] | None
```
The solution implemented here is not pretty, but we can hopefully get
rid of it via https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1711. Also, once we
properly support `ParamSpec` and `Concatenate`, we should be able to
remove some of this code.

This addresses many of the `invalid-type-arguments` false-positives in
https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1685. With this change, there are
still some diagnostics of this type left. Instead of implementing even
more (rather sophisticated) workarounds for these cases as well, it
might be much easier to wait for full `ParamSpec`/`Concatenate` support
and then try again.

A disadvantage of this implementation is that we lose track of some
`@Todo` types and replace them with `Unknown`. We could spend more
effort and try to preserve them, but I'm unsure if this is the best use
of our time right now.

## Test Plan

New Markdown tests.
2025-12-03 10:00:02 +01:00
Denys Zhak f4e4229683
Add token based `parenthesized_ranges` implementation (#21738)
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
2025-12-03 08:15:17 +00:00
David Peter e6ddeed386
[ty] Default-specialization of generic type aliases (#21765)
## Summary

Implement default-specialization of generic type aliases (implicit or
PEP-613) if they are used in a type expression without an explicit
specialization.

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1690

## Typing conformance

```diff
-generics_defaults_specialization.py:26:5: error[type-assertion-failure] Type `SomethingWithNoDefaults[int, str]` does not match asserted type `SomethingWithNoDefaults[int, DefaultStrT]`
```

That's exactly what we want ✔️ 

All other tests in this file pass as well, with the exception of this
assertion, which is just wrong (at least according to our
interpretation, `type[Bar] != <class 'Bar'>`). I checked that we do
correctly default-specialize the type parameter which is not displayed
in the diagnostic that we raise.
```py
class Bar(SubclassMe[int, DefaultStrT]): ...

assert_type(Bar, type[Bar[str]])  # ty: Type `type[Bar[str]]` does not match asserted type `<class 'Bar'>`
```

## Ecosystem impact

Looks like I should have included this last week 😎 

## Test Plan

Updated pre-existing tests and add a few new ones.
2025-12-03 09:10:45 +01:00
Alex Waygood c5b8d551df
[ty] Suppress false positives when `dataclasses.dataclass(...)(cls)` is called imperatively (#21729)
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1705
2025-12-03 08:05:25 +00:00
Ibraheem Ahmed 7b0aab1696
[ty] `type[T]` is assignable to an inferable typevar (#21766)
## Summary

Resolves https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1712.
2025-12-02 18:25:09 -05:00
Brent Westbrook 2250fa6f98
Fix syntax error false positives for `await` outside functions (#21763)
## Summary

Fixes #21750 and a related bug in `PLE1142`. We were not properly
considering generators to be valid `await` contexts, which caused the
`F704` issue. One of the tests I added for this also uncovered an issue
in `PLE1142` for comprehensions nested within async generators because
we were only checking the current scope rather than traversing the
nested context.

## Test Plan

Both of these rules are implemented as semantic syntax errors, so I
added tests (and fixes) in both Ruff and ty.
2025-12-02 21:02:02 +00:00
Alex Waygood 392a8e4e50
[ty] Improve diagnostics for unsupported comparison operations (#21737) 2025-12-02 19:58:45 +00:00
Micha Reiser 515de2d062
Move `Token`, `TokenKind` and `Tokens` to `ruff-python-ast` (#21760) 2025-12-02 20:10:46 +01:00
Douglas Creager 508c0a0861
[ty] Don't confuse multiple occurrences of `typing.Self` when binding bound methods (#21754)
In the following example, there are two occurrences of `typing.Self`,
one for `Foo.foo` and one for `Bar.bar`:

```py
from typing import Self, reveal_type

class Foo[T]:
    def foo(self: Self) -> T:
        raise NotImplementedError

class Bar:
    def bar(self: Self, x: Foo[Self]):
        # SHOULD BE: bound method Foo[Self@bar].foo() -> Self@bar
        # revealed: bound method Foo[Self@bar].foo() -> Foo[Self@bar]
        reveal_type(x.foo)

def f[U: Bar](x: Foo[U]):
    # revealed: bound method Foo[U@f].foo() -> U@f
    reveal_type(x.foo)
```

When accessing a bound method, we replace any occurrences of `Self` with
the bound `self` type.

We were doing this correctly for the second reveal. We would first apply
the specialization, getting `(self: Self@foo) -> U@F` as the signature
of `x.foo`. We would then bind the `self` parameter, substituting
`Self@foo` with `Foo[U@F]` as part of that. The return type was already
specialized to `U@F`, so that substitution had no further affect on the
type that we revealed.

In the first reveal, we would follow the same process, but we confused
the two occurrences of `Self`. We would first apply the specialization,
getting `(self: Self@foo) -> Self@bar` as the method signature. We would
then try to bind the `self` parameter, substituting `Self@foo` with
`Foo[Self@bar]`. However, because we didn't distinguish the two separate
`Self`s, and applied the substitution to the return type as well as to
the `self` parameter.

The fix is to track which particular `Self` we're trying to substitute
when applying the type mapping.

Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1713
2025-12-02 13:15:09 -05:00
Alex Waygood ac2552b11b
[ty] Move `all_members`, and related types/routines, out of `ide_support.rs` (#21695) 2025-12-02 14:45:24 +00:00
Micha Reiser 644096ea8a
[ty] Fix find-references for import aliases (#21736) 2025-12-02 14:37:50 +01:00
Aria Desires 015ab9e576
[ty] add tests for workspaces (#21741)
Here are a bunch of (variously failing and passing) mdtests that reflect
the kinds of issues people encounter when running ty over an entire
workspace without sufficient hand-holding (especially because in the IDE
it is unclear *how* to provide that hand-holding).
2025-12-02 06:43:41 -05:00
Douglas Creager cf4196466c
[ty] Stop testing the (brittle) constraint set display implementation (#21743)
The `Display` implementation for constraint sets is brittle, and
deserves a rethink. But later! It's perfectly fine for printf debugging;
we just shouldn't be writing mdtests that depend on any particular
rendering details. Most of these tests can be replaced with an
equivalence check that actually validates that the _behavior_ of two
constraint sets are identical.
2025-12-02 09:17:29 +01:00
Charlie Marsh 72304b01eb
[ty] Add a diagnostic for prohibited `NamedTuple` attribute overrides (#21717)
## Summary

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1684.
2025-12-01 21:46:58 -05:00
Ibraheem Ahmed ec854c7199
[ty] Fix subtyping with `type[T]` and unions (#21740)
## Summary

Resolves
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/21685#issuecomment-3591695954.
2025-12-01 18:20:13 -05:00
Andrew Gallant a561e6659d [ty] Exclude `typing_extensions` from completions unless it's really available
This works by adding a third module resolution mode that lets the caller
opt into _some_ shadowing of modules that is otherwise not allowed (for
`typing` and `typing_extensions`).

Fixes astral-sh/ty#1658
2025-12-01 11:24:16 -05:00
Alex Waygood 0e651b50b7
[ty] Fix false positives for `class F(Generic[*Ts]): ...` (#21723) 2025-12-01 13:24:07 +00:00
David Peter 116fd7c7af
[ty] Remove `GenericAlias`-related todo type (#21728)
## Summary

If you manage to create an `typing.GenericAlias` instance without us
knowing how that was created, then we don't know what to do with this in
a type annotation. So it's better to be explicit and show an error
instead of failing silently with a `@Todo` type.

## Test Plan

* New Markdown tests
* Zero ecosystem impact
2025-12-01 13:02:38 +00:00
David Peter 5358ddae88
[ty] Exhaustiveness checking for generic classes (#21726)
## Summary

We had tests for this already, but they used generic classes that were
bivariant in their type parameter, and so this case wasn't captured.

closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1702

## Test Plan

Updated Markdown tests
2025-12-01 13:52:36 +01:00
Alex Waygood 3a11e714c6
[ty] Show the user where the type variable was defined in `invalid-type-arguments` diagnostics (#21727) 2025-12-01 12:25:49 +00:00
Alex Waygood a2096ee2cb
[ty] Emit `invalid-named-tuple` on namedtuple classes that have field names starting with underscores (#21697) 2025-12-01 11:36:02 +00:00
Carl Meyer c2773b4c6f
[ty] support `type[tuple[...]]` (#21652)
Fixes https://github.com/astral-sh/ty/issues/1649

## Summary

We missed this when adding support for `type[]` of a specialized
generic.

## Test Plan

Added mdtests.
2025-12-01 11:49:26 +01:00